U.S. Virgin Islands

Friday, February 07, 2014

Nuisance lawsuits are a worldwide phenomenon. Every First
World country, that is North America and the European Union, has people who
would sue at the drop of a hat. Not many, but they damage the reputations of
the people who really have been hurt and have no other recourse to fall back
on.

For instance there are those people who have been victims of
Catholic pedophile priests or a previous generation of Irish women who had been
enslaved by the Magdalene nuns.. They sued. They had to sue; there was no other
way to get justice.

Those being sued would sometimes warn that if such things
continued to happen, that someday, someone would sue over theology. Not the
results of theology, but over the doctrine itself.

The other day, this happened. Thomas Phillips, a former
Mormon Bishop, managed to get a British judge to issue a bench warrant to the
President of the whole Church in Salt Lake City in order to answer to charges
of fraud. The fraud: The entire
Mormon theology.

This is sort of like suing Grandma for lying about the
existence of Santa Claus.

The facts in the case are this: Philips had discovered that
the rumors that early Mormons, including Joseph Smith himself, were practicing
polygamists were true. Shocked, he resigned his membership and started an anti-Mormon
website.

Under a British law enacted in 2006 that makes false
advertising illegal, Phillip managed to get Judge Elizabeth Roscoe to issue two
summonses on behalf of former members who paid the church tithes, stating that
if President Monson doesn’t show up on the specified date in March, a warrant
will be issued for his arrest.

Few think that Monson will show up, but the judge may issue
an arrest warrant. Palestinian activists had gotten a judge to issue an arrest
warrant for former Israeli Minister Tzipi Livini over Operation Cast Lead in
2009, and other such actions had been taken.

But on it’s merits, the suit is based on a single
accusation: Monson and the top leadership of the Mormon Church are a bunch of
lying Atheists. They always knew that there were no golden plates, Jesus never
came to America, and there is NO Mrs. God.

Now this actually plays into the Church’s hands. They are in
a perverse way proud of the fact that they were persecuted in the early to
middle 19th century, and this is just another example of what
they’ve been telling their membership for nearly 180 years.

I think Monson should call Phillips’ bluff. The bench
warrant names him as a representative of an organization, so on March 14th,
he could legally just send a lawyer. If the judge issues an arrest warrant
anyway, they could play the persecution card.

They could do it NOW. The fraud charge is CRIMINAL offense,
and is technically brought on behalf of he Queen who, among other things, is
the Head of the Anglican Communion. The head of one church suing another for fraud!!! It’s a
win/win situation! For the Latter Day Saints!!!!

Even if there were a trial, it would be great publicity for
the LDS. I hope they let it go on.